Lykens Valley: History & Genealogy
  • Home
  • About
  • Categories
    • Commerce
    • Communications
    • Education
    • Entertainment
    • Farming
    • Genealogy
    • Government
    • Labor
    • Memories
    • Military
    • Mining
    • Organizations
    • Religion
    • Resources
    • Sports
    • Transportation
  • Civil War Blog
  • PA Historian
  • Contact

Gratz – Hoffman Brothers Garage, Before 1924

An undated, pre-1924 photo of the Hoffman Brothers Garage, on the northeast corner of Center Street and South Street, Gratz, Dauphin County, Pennsylvania. In the Great Gratz Fire of 1924, the garage burned to the ground and was later replaced with a one-story, concrete block building.  The replacement building is still standing today but is no longer part of a business – and it is in great disrepair, part of the blight evident in a few sections of the community.

The garage sign reads:

Repairing — Accessories — Tires

All Work Guaranteed

Pictured are:

Marlin Umholtz (1905-1967), on motorcycle, one of the leaders of the Gratz Ku Klux Klan.  Standing next to the auto are Russell Hoffman (1899-1962) and his brother Earl Hoffman (1895-1944), operators of the garage, who also were members of the Klan, as was their father, George Wellington Hoffman (1873-1946), not pictured.

One old-timer in Gratz indicated that the Great Gratz Fire of 1924 was believed by some to be caused by members of the Klan who attempted a burn a cross behind the Rogers Union House Hotel across from the Hoffman Garage. The old-timer could not speculate who the Klan’s target was, but perhaps it was the hotel operator who may have been renting rooms to people the Klan considered unwelcome and undesirable. In any event, it was a windy evening and somehow the ice house behind the hotel caught fire.  The fire then was then out of control and and a gust of wind sent it across the street where it consumed the Hoffman Brothers Garage and Harry Smith‘s establishment on the southeast corner of the same intersection.  Years after the fire, the sister of Marlin Umholtz told historical researchers that her brother was home when the fire broke out, and immediately went to aid the townspeople who were trying to put the fire out.

The fire was officially labeled “of suspicious origin.”

_____________________________

Corrections and additional information should be added as comments to this post.

Share this:

  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook

Like this:

Like Loading...

Related

Gratz
April 24, 2018 Norman Gasbarro

Post navigation

Sons of Jonas James Troutman III → ← Tremont – Westwood Colliery

Email notification of new posts

Places

Ashland Bear Gap Berrysburg Dalmatia Elizabethville Erdman Fisherville Gordon Gratz Halifax Halifax Township Hegins Hegins Township Herndon Hubley Township Jackson Township Killinger Klingerstown Lenkerville Loyalton Lykens Lykens Township Matamoras Mifflin Township Millersburg Muir Orwin Pillow Pine Grove Porter Township Reinerton Sacramento Shamokin Specktown Spring Glen Tower City Tremont Upper Paxton Township Valley View Washington Township Wayne Township Wiconisco Wiconisco Township Williamstown Williams Township

Categories

  • Commerce
  • Communications
  • Education
  • Entertainment
  • Farming
  • Genealogy
  • Government
  • Labor
  • Memories
  • Military
  • Mining
  • Organizations
  • Religion
  • Resources
  • Sports
  • Transportation
  • Unidentified

Categories

  • Commerce
  • Communications
  • Education
  • Entertainment
  • Farming
  • Genealogy
  • Government
  • Labor
  • Memories
  • Military
  • Mining
  • Organizations
  • Religion
  • Resources
  • Sports
  • Transportation
  • Unidentified

RSS Feeds

  • RSS - Posts
  • RSS - Comments

Copyright 2016-2024, Norman Gasbarro, Philadelphia, PA

Site Created by Brian Tomlin

Archives

Powered by WordPress | theme Layout Builder
 

Loading Comments...
 

    %d